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  2. Laundry detergent pod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laundry_detergent_pod

    Laundry pods were advertised as a way to reduce wasted use of powdered and liquid detergent by having precise measurements for a load. For large loads, most brands recommend two pods, with Tide suggesting up to three. Detergent pods cost significantly more than liquid detergent for equivalent laundry loads.

  3. Tide Pods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tide_Pods

    The film in Tide Pods is a polyvinyl alcohol film developed by MonoSol which is intended to dissolve in any temperature water. The pod detergent is also 10 percent water by volume compared to liquid Tide detergent which is 50 percent water by volume. This was done to prevent the pod from melting from having high water volume.

  4. Tide (brand) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tide_(brand)

    Tide Free is marketed as being free from dyes or perfumes. [15] Tide-To-Go is a product packaged in a pen-like format and intended to remove small stains on the spot, without further laundering. [13] In Puerto Rico, [16] the Tide formula is marketed under the name Ace. Since 2012, Tide has sold Tide Pods, a line of laundry detergent pod, making ...

  5. How to Use Laundry Pods the Right Way - AOL

    www.aol.com/laundry-pods-way-010253004.html

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  6. Tide detergent box gets smaller, but is it really ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/tide-detergent-box-gets-smaller...

    A woman noticed that her Tide detergent box was smaller than an old one. But then she learned why it may not be a case of shrinkflation.

  7. Study finds thousands of children poisoned by laundry ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2016-04-25-study-finds...

    Consumer safety groups have started warning that laundry detergent packets could be easily eaten by children who might mistake them for candy. In 2013, a 7-month-old boy died in Florida after ...

  8. Oxydol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxydol

    It was P&G's first laundry soap. In the 1930s, Oxydol was the sponsor of the Ma Perkins radio show, considered the first soap opera; as such, Oxydol sponsorship put the "soap" in "soap opera". [citation needed] In the mid-1950s, the soap was suffering declining sales, due in large part to P&G's introduction of its popular detergent, Tide. As a ...

  9. Cheer (brand) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheer_(brand)

    The brand was the Jerry Seinfeld character's favorite type of detergent on the show Seinfeld, as seen in the episode "The Sponge". As "Blue Cheer", the brand also gave its name to a variety of LSD produced by San Francisco chemist Owsley Stanley , and the band Blue Cheer was most likely named after the variety of LSD.